A 10-Year-Old Leads a Clean-Up Movement in Rural New Brunswick

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A 10-Year-Old Leads a Clean-Up Movement in Rural New Brunswick

In a quiet border town, where the St. Croix River divides Canada from the United States, a ten-year-old girl has sparked a movement that is cleaning up far more than just litter.

It began, as many small revolutions do, with a simple question. During a car ride three years ago, 7-year-old Lydia Stubbert glanced out the window and noticed the ground was strewn with garbage. She turned to her mother and asked: “What if we went and picked up the garbage sometime?”

Today, that question has grown into Lydia’s Community Clean-Up, an annual event that has drawn dozens of residents armed with gloves and garbage bags to the streets, parks, and riverbanks of St. Stephen. The impact has spread well beyond municipal borders, inspiring clean-ups in neighbouring communities like St. Andrews and Campobello Island.

“I like to see that lots of people help do it, and it just looks better,” Lydia said in an interview with CHCO-TV. Her shy but earnest words belie the scale of the undertaking she has set in motion.

The first clean-up drew just 15 volunteers—far fewer than the 60 or 70 who expressed interest online—but Lydia persisted. A presentation before town council this year cemented her status as a fledgling civic leader. “Once I started, it just started to flow out of my mouth,” she recalled about getting over her nerves.

Her mother, Angela Stubbert, admits she was initially reluctant. Time was tight, and organizing a town-wide clean-up seemed daunting. But when she saw her daughter’s determination, she knew she had to act. “If she wants to be involved in her community, then I had to find the time,” she said.

That time has been well spent. Lydia’s efforts have not only reduced the visible trash on St. Stephen’s streets but also fostered a deeper sense of responsibility among residents. “If it’s just St. Stephen, that doesn’t help other people,” Lydia explained, matter-of-factly, when asked why she wanted to expand the clean-up beyond town limits.

While her mother now fields emails and phone calls from volunteers and municipal officials, Angela is quick to point out that the vision is entirely Lydia’s. “This is 100 per cent her, unrehearsed,” she said.

Environmental stewardship may be at the heart of Lydia’s project, but the movement is also about something larger—reclaiming the notion of community itself. In an era when civic engagement often feels like an afterthought, Lydia’s clean-up serves as a reminder that even the smallest gestures can snowball into lasting change.

As the third annual clean-up approaches on April 26 (rain date is April 27), Lydia has a simple message for her neighbours: “Just go clean up around your house, around your neighbour’s house, around town.”

Her plea is not just for St. Stephen. It is a call that resonates across New Brunswick, and perhaps further, inviting others to consider what can be accomplished when a community rallies together, even when the call to action comes from a child.

“The more people that help, the more we can do,” Lydia said. And in this small town, at least, people are listening.

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